.257 bedding the action

I didn't care for the bedding in the recoil lug area of my .257 so I re-bed the lug area. It still shoots the 100 grain TTSX bullets sub MOA, some groups sub 1/2 MOA, but now it shoots the berger 115 gr into a 2 1/2" group. Before bedding it shoot them into a .75 group. I must have changed the pressure on the pressure points in the stock. I thought about just taking the pressure points out and free floating the barrel but,, what happens if it than no longer shoots the TTSX bullets, which I really want to use in this rifle for hunting. The bergers are just for long range practice.Do I just leave it alone or do I take a chance?? I would be upset if it no longer shot the barnes

what model are we talking about ?,I did a full glass bed to a deluxe once and it shot all over the place without the pressure point in the forearm,if the load you hunt with is good I wouldn't mess with it.

If it were me, I'd have to decide if I would be more upset with it not shooting the Barnes for hunting and having to start all over at square one with the rifle or if it not shooting the Berger 115's along with the Barnes was more irritating to me. How do the Barnes do for you at longer ranges? If it were me, and it was a dedicated hunting rifle, I'd probably be inclined to practice specifically with the load I was gonna hunt with anyways. But I do completely understand liking to be able to switch loads in a gun for different purposes. Hope it works out!!

The rifle is a Vanguard sub-moa. The rifles main use is hunting with Barnes bullets. This load is going around 3550, haven't shot it past 600 yards, it shot a 5 shot, 5" group.Doing a scope tracking test with this load at 100 yards, I shot 18 rounds under 1" after re-bedding

The berger was going 3120 and would add to barrel life and was accurate to 1000 yds

As long as accuracy is consistent I'd leave it alone and fine tune your ttsx loads. Sub moa is not bad I'm not a big fan of bergers for hunting , target shooting is a different subject. I would be more inclined especially for a production rifle is to shoot hunting bullets because that's what I'm using in the field anyway, and it just makes you a better longer range field shooter. You can always try some of the Hornady or Sierra's for fun and see what it will do and not break the bank